Red Scarlet
Member
Oh, I think you could save in the town you got the boat in the remake and not the NES version.
Red Scarlet said:Die Hard 4 is PG-13. I saw it on a commercial last night. Look what you made me do!
CajoleJuice said:Dragon Warrior is the game that made me pretty much avoid RPGs for the first 15 years of my life.
CajoleJuice said:
I know, I saw it tonight. :/Red Scarlet said:I'm dead serious though. There was a new (to me) commercial for it last night on Comedy Central and it said PG-13.![]()
:lolRed Scarlet said:Do you like any games? :lol I just remember your posts about MP2 since you couldn't figure out to go inside the ship at the start to continue on and being pissed off at SotN on XBLA.
Son of Godzilla said::lol
I suppose this is obvious, but I hardly see MP2, SotN, and DQVII as a litmus test for whether or not someone enjoys games.
Mandoric said:As for the topic at hand... DQ is a series that shouldn't -need- an appreciation thread, but it's great that it has one.
Aeana said:It shouldn't, but DQ doesn't seem to be very popular around these parts, so I felt the need to create one. It seems like many have only played DQ8, so giving an introduction to the rest of the series and its history seemed like a good idea to me.
This is hardly the thread for this, but no. I've got nothing against the genres they represent, but the specific games are plagued with problems.Mandoric said:It's nearly as good a three-game litmus test as any, isn't it? DQ being the consistently technically-surpassing soul of JRPG and SotN a fusion of the high points of platform and action-RPG while being exemplary of 2d art and modular music, while Prime covers the basis of free-roaming gaming.
Son of Godzilla said:I'd say my biggest grevience with DQVII is that it's essentially a SNES game that was released at the end of the PS' lifespan. "Classic" the style may be, but it's more than a few years outdated.
Erdrick said:. I always remember a letter from an old gamer who was about 60 or 70 and was imploring anyone to bring over DQ5 and 6 before he died, as he longed to play them in a language he could understand.
carlos said:funny thing really, the last DQ on nes looking worse than the earlier games.
carlos said:yeah, my mistake , I meant 3 in particular looking better than 4, not all the earlier games
it might be just me, but there's something in the color palette or something used in 4 that is very unappealing, if not just plain hurting my eyes when I try to play it.
GhaleonQ said:You know, I often make fun of those who like the games deemed "bad" in a series. However, apart from IV, VII is the Dragon Quest game that I really like. VIII, on the other hand, is 1 of only 3 games that I've returned (well, resold, after I beat it). Does this make me a bad person or somehow incompetent?
soulhouf said:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/14/DQ5-cover.jpg/256px-DQ5-cover.jpg
S-E, Bring this one to NA please!!!
Nintendo Power said:The quest in Dragon Warrior IV takes place in five chapters, each with different characters and missions. The world is huge and the story is compelling. Other innovations include the use of Tactics during combat in Chapter 5 so you don't have to command each party member. This month's review should help you over the hurdles of this sprawling adventure.
+ Multiple characters and story lines. A huge world to explore. New fighting tactics for parties
- The graphics are not as high quality as previous Dragon Warrior games.
usea said:One thing I didn't understand about dq8 is how the tension thing works. I've played a lot of final fantasy games so I mostly just chose attack a lot and died. I might pick up dq8 again before the end of the year, but I'd like to figure out how tension works.
From what I understand it's just a temporary attack increase? How much does it increase your attack by? Does it last for multiple attacks or only work once? Why is it better to raise tension and then attack than it is to attack twice?
usea said:I will admit to never playing through more than like 25% through a DQ game. The only ones I've played are dw1 and dq8.
One thing I didn't understand about dq8 is how the tension thing works. I've played a lot of final fantasy games so I mostly just chose attack a lot and died. I might pick up dq8 again before the end of the year, but I'd like to figure out how tension works.
From what I understand it's just a temporary attack increase? How much does it increase your attack by? Does it last for multiple attacks or only work once? Why is it better to raise tension and then attack than it is to attack twice?
Also added was the new feature of an immigrant town. After finding the character that wants to start a new town, you can find various NPC's all over the world and ask him or her to join the new town's population. There were a number of final forms of the immigrant town with new shops and other goodies. The final forms ranged from a grand slum with a super casino, to a big church place full of priests and nuns.
AdmiralViscen said:What are the recommended skill point distributions for the characters in DQ8?
RevenantKioku said:5r looks really good. Can't wait to delve into it.
gblues said:A feature unique to DQ4 is that the overworld theme in chapter 5 changes depending on who you put at the head of the party. I don't think that's been in any other DQ game, but it's a nice touch.
firex said:I did some level grinding in DQ8 just to try out different skills (instead of starting a whole new game) and yeah, you can make just about any build work. You just need to focus on one skill at a time first. Spreading your points out is bad, not to mention if you wait to build up a second skill tree you can then raise it up pretty fast because you'll get more skill points each level. I think the only real exception I found to the "any build can work" thing is Angelo, but only in the sense that I don't think his Charisma skills are that great past the first 5 or so. Any weapon focus is fine. You get him just late enough (though still way early in the game) that you'll have a good handle on what you'd want to build his skill points for ahead of time anyway, though.
Oh definitely. Especially if you're a fan of Pokemon.djtiesto said:Are the Monsters games for GBC worth playing?
djtiesto said:Are the Monsters games for GBC worth playing?
Eh what?Tyrone Slothrop said:DQ8 was one of the most brilliant and addictive games i've ever played. anything before that is just way too archaic for me.
soulhouf said:![]()
S-E, Bring this one to NA please!!!
Magicpaint said:Eh what?